Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, April 12, 1893, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

| i 4 THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: THE DAILY o BEK. S ———t R F. ROSEWATER Editor PUBLISHED 1V MOR! FRY TERME OF SURSCRIPTION. Dally B thout 8unday) One Year A 00 Datly and Sunday, Une Year 0 00 Six Mont) 13 4’w Three Mont) ;4'--" Funday I One Yenr . 200 Enturday e, One Yo - 160 Weekly Bee, O & . 100 OFFICES Omaha, The Nee Bullding Eouth Orinhin, corner N and 26th Streots Connedi Bois 12 Penrl Stroet Chieagp Office, 817 Chamber of Commercs New York, Rooms 18, 14 and 15, Tribune Bullding Washington. 518 Vourteenth St CORRESPONDENCE. ANl comnunicat relating to news and ed torind natter should be wddressed: To the Editor. BUSINESS LETTERS, Al business letters and remittances should be nddressed 1o The Beo Publishing Company Omahu. Drafts, cliccks And postoflien orders 10 be nindo pay to the order of the com- pany. S THE BEE PUBLISHI COMPANY SWORN STATEMENT OF CIRCULATION Btate of Nebraska | County of 1ougins ( . Tzscliuck, soerctary of Tie BER pub Hahink compiny. (o0s solomnly awear that the motunt cireulntinn of 13k DATLY IVEK for the week ending Ap#1 S, 9L was as followa Bunday, April 2 v . Monday, Aj ril L April 4 Wednesday. Aprll 5 Thuredny. April i ¥riduy. Apr) . Saturduy, April 8 3 GEO. B TZSCHUCK, Sworn to hofore me and subscribed in my pros ence this Kth duy of Anril, 16 A. I% FEIL, Notary Public. Average Clrenlation for March, 1893, 24,179 m———————————————————— THE wheat business is still very im- portant in Minncsota, but the wolf in- dustry is @ close sceond. The legisla- ture of that state has just appropriated 848,000 for wolf hount THE Minnesota legislature has passed the bill providing for the erection of a new capital at a cost of $2,000,000. By the time the structure is comploted its ¢t is sure to mount up to $5,000,000 or more. Tre Atlanta Constitulion invites immi- grants to ¢ me to that state and engage in agriculture hecause “‘when corn is 17 or- cents in Nebraska it is 50 cents in gia.” But as they cannot raise any corn to speak of in Georgia it is not easy to see the foree of the argument. THE sugar beet industry in Nebraska ntion in the bulletin Department of Agrieul- ture on b gar experiments. This is regarded as one of the most promis- ing states in the union for this industry Beet growing an expe ment with the farmers of Nebraska. re es much at fssued by t t isno longer SECRETARY HOKE SMITH must be given ¢ cdit for the good he does just as freely as if he had been discovered years ago. He has restored to the public domain certain lands unlawfully held by the Southern Pacific in southern Cali- fornia, and has abrogated a great timber catting eontract in Montana for the pro- tection of cur forests. Sccretary Smith seems t) bo all right so f; REPUBLICAN members ture who opposed the Dbill are very generally ving an un- pleasantly warm reception upon return- ing to the midst of their constituents. The opposition of Senator Scott of Falls City and Representative Wilson of Kearney to the measure, is emphatically denounced by the républicans of their respective districts, of the legisla- ximum rate THE apprehended inability of the Russian war ships to be prosent at the approaching naval review is to be sin- cerely regre ted. Americans have gra (£l rec llceticns of the presence of the Russian fleet in Hampton Roads during an exceedingly crit al period in the history of the nation, tand the r men-of-war turn of the czar's period of the republ De at this peaceful pros- rity would > peculiarly gratifying. A WRITER in the Engineering Magazine, in an article that begins with the statement that the United States is now the leading manufactur- ing country of the world, observes that it is almost incomprehensible that in ten years the increase in capital invested in manufactures should exceed the total invested only twenty years ago. It is only by such methods of comparison that it is possible to comprehend the wonderful strides which this country is taking in industrial progre NoO s0ONER had Chicago capitalists begun to plan for the erection of a great group of tanneries in conneetion with the packing industry than the feas- ibility of similar enterprises in Kansas City and Omaha began to be discussed. The only advantage Chicago has over Kansas City and Omaha is in the facil- ities for securing tan bark by lake ves- sels, but even this advantage may be counterbalanced by the cost of trans- porting the hides to Chicago and shipping back the finished product. IN HIS contrition perhaps, after read- ing Governor McKinley's eulogy on the late Rutherford B. Hayes, the editor of the New York Suin admits that “he was & man of respectable talents, steady courage and judicious charac This admission is gratifying but of far more importance to the present hour is Mr. Dana’s philosophical observation that ‘‘the personal character of William Me- Kinley in Ohio is without precedent in that state, and almost without parallel elsewhere,” that “*his renomination for governor by acclamation is now con- ceded, and it is believed he will have 80,000 to 50,000 majorit, or," IT 18 not surprising that the business men in Canada should be among the foremost advocates of annexation. In 1890 there was in the United Siates ono failure t) every twenty-three business concerns, while in Canada there was one to every fort, In 1801 there was one failure to every eighty-two in the United States and one to every forty two in Canada. In 1892 the failures wer me to ninety-two in the United States and one in forty-five in Canada. These figures are significant. Taken in con- nection with the great and growing na- tional debt of the Dominion they throw some light upon financial conditions in that country. THE COMPARISON MADE. ! For many months the World-Herald has kept at the head of its editorfal col- umn a notice in bold, black type, claim- ing for {tself the lu ciroulation in Omaha: the largost clreulation in South Om the largest eireulation in Doug las county and the largest eireulation in Nobraska. On tho 10th day of March a challenge to G. M. Hitcheock Rosewater, president of THE Beg Pub was issued lishing company, to verify those claims, and five separate propositions were made, covering the relative city, ¢ and state circulation of THE Bek World-Herald. ch of these pr tions wes backed on the part of THE BE| by a forfeit of $1,000, payable to Mr. | Hiteheoek or any charitable or benevo- | lent society he might name. No forfeit whatever was exacted from Mr. Hiteh- | eock, the only condition being that in | posi- case he failed to meet the challenge | squarcly on the conditions named he | should take down his sign of largest cir- | Mr. Hitcheock, with aracteristic | audacity, accepted cach of the five | propositions, eoupled with the insulting | declaration thav Rosewater's word was | not wood enough and demanded that | checks for $5,000 be deposited with | Henry W, Yates, president of the Ne- | braska National bank, and that Mr. Yates be given authority to name three bankers [ os to examine the ve- spective subseription lists after they had been published and verified and de- cide whether the money deposited with Mr. Yates was forfeited On the 11th day of M the Iirst Omaha for $1,000 with Mr. Yates in complianc Hiteheock's demand. The first, second, thi propositions, which eove | 1 bank of v‘ | | Nationa *h were checks on deposited with Mr. rd and fourth red cireulation in Omaha and Douglas county, were t0 | gutoome of the injunction suit. The | be decided within thirty days, and the | ¢ijumor for compromise and sue- fifth proposition, | render of whatever aghts we tion in the whole state of in- | nay have for the sake of cluding Omaha and Douglas county, was | posuming work immediately is ill-timed Iimited to forty days from the date of | gng ll-advised. Omaha submitted for | the deposit. 1t was evident from the | tyenty yeurs to the old cow shed, and | outset that the acceptance of the chal- | ¢ho has'horne up patiently without any lenge by Mr. Hitcheock wus a mere | gopot for two years. She can better | bluft. - He did not expect that the $5,000 | 47ord to remain without a depot another would be deposited with his bunker and | veur or two than accept conditions that subject to & committee which that | wi) bo unsatisfactory if not disastrous. | banker should name. He doubtless did | he Uniondepot is an abortion. It is expect that a similar deposit would be not wh rrced upon three ye demanded of him, which he might de- | 470 and never can be made conven: cline or tie a string to. The thirty days within which he was | to publish the Woild-Herald list in Omaha and Douglas county expived | Tonday. In fact, the time for publ tion had expirved on the 20th of March, | since each publisher was to have twenty days within the thirty days limit for verifying the respective lists. In other | words, Mr. Hitcheock has failed to terialize with his lists, although ' Beg had offered him immense odds of | two to one, In view of the failure of Herald to meet the challenge within the | time specified the cevtificd chocks cover- ing the four fivst propositions were with- drawn yesterda ‘he fifth check for $1,000 will remain on deposit with Mr. Yates ten days longer. Inasmuch as the fifth proposition embraces the actual paid culation in the whole state, Mr. Hitcheock still has an opportunity to earn $1,000 for one of the charitable in- | titutions named by him in his letter of acceptance, In order to satisfy our patrons that THE BEE was in position to make good | its challenge we have gone to the ex- pense und trouble to secure a thorough | canvass of the city, the result of which is presented in this issuc. The census of subscribers whose names we publish speaks for itself. It shows that ThHge BEE is practically without a competitor | in the local field of Omaha and thi is equally true respecting its position | in the state. DISCUSSED IN T11, VATE. Organized labor throughout the country will be deeply interestad in the discussion of the recent judicial dee ‘ting its interests which has ta place in the United Statos senato. evidence of the fact that the volved in these decisions are serious consideration in the high places of the nation, and that the importanc of their bearing upon the relations of labor and capital and upon social eon- | ditions realized and appreciated. There is manifestly no problem awaiting | slution that so profoundly eoncerns all | of the people as that of adjusting on & secure and equi- table basis the obligations and relations between employers and employed, and the demand for this is especially urgont with respect to those who are engaged in a public or quasi-public service. It only necessary to study the vast public interests at stake in connection with the transportation servico of the country to understand how necessary it is that this service should have practicable safeguard aguinst interference and in- terruption through eomtroversies be- tween those engagod in its performance The discussion of this problem should be condueted in a strictly judicial spirit, frec from all prejudice, and especially from all partisan bias. It cannot bo said that the consideration given it in the senate was altogher of this nature. One senator arraigned thoe judiciary as attempting to make serfs of the men who are employed by railvoad corpora- tions and charged that tho courts had orcised arbitrary powers, while an- other in terms less broad made a like implication, These attempts to dis- credit the courts must be condemned b ery good citizen. Under this govern- ment the judicial tribunals are open to all classes of the people and are the last resort for the peaceful redress of griev- ances. Whenever the masses of the peo- ple lose confidence in them free govern- ment is in danger and those who sit in the congress of the nation cannot be too careful to avoid bringing the courts into distrust and disrespect. Nothing could be done that would more certainly imperil republican institutions. There ought to be no doubt of the final settlement of the questions raised by the vecent judicial decisions which will be satisfactory to the intelligent judg- ment of the country and of permanent benefit to the public interests. It may safely be assumed that when the cour - the World- SE fons n It is issues in- receiving are classes | but of last resort has passed upon thos ‘ | questions no class of men will by de- | | prived of any right which they may | | fairly elaim under the laws, and | | that whatever restraints the stat- | utes impose upon one class will be declared equally binding upon every class, The laws that have nized labor mrse of been Invoked to restrain org from interfering with the fr commerce will be held, there is eve reason to believe, to apply with equal force to the corporations which employ that labor. There is no question as to { the intent of those laws, They were not passed with any thought of the applica tion that has been given them. But this does not invalidate the position of the | courts. The country can patiently await | the decision of its highest tribunal upon the highly important that hav been raised and no interest will suffer in | the interiw. Meanwhile denunciation | of the courts by demagogues and tisans will have no countenance from fair-minded citizens of any class, par- THE UNION DEPOL NCTION. The Union depot injunetion case which omes up for hearing today involves the rights and interests of every taxpayer in Omaha. It is not mercly a question whether the bonus of $150,000 shall be turned over to the Unic whether the compact made Omaha twenty years ago and reite tho bonds were voted by the Union Pacific bound itself to give access to its depot and depot ‘[ ads that ma INJU in bonds 1 Pacific, with | which grounds to all the r its bridge shall be abrogated and tle | company be given the right to bar out such roads as it may see fit. It is true y cross that the Rock Island and Milwaukee haye a contract by which they enter Omaha with their passenger trains, but | their right to ocoupy the Union depot on | reasonable terms is dependent upon the | and commodious to the public. | The effort of City Attorney Connell to have the injunction modified is not in the interest of the city, and it is to be | hoped that the injunction will neither be dissolved nor modified. IS THE WEST BECOMING ANARCHISTIC? ¢ York socialism and | | | Aceording to a writer in the N Evening Post Bellamyism anarchism ave distinguishing character- istics of the newer states of the west. Such generalizations ave simply absurd, and th because an | insignificant number of well meaning but misguided ¢ are not the less so people do believe in these things and openly advocate them. cisely the same tex the e lencies are found in | and wouth in greater ov less do- | but do th | eontrolling or even an ment of socioty., Without attempting to disprc ments so manifestly esting to inquire w nowherve represent a influential ele- state- inter- at purpose is to be served by the publication in eastern jour- | untrue it is | | | | | culture or the saving common sense e sential to healthy political and social life and true advancement along ali lines of progress. 1t is chavged that the west is communistic, that it has no respect for vested interests, that it was unreas- onably hostile to corporations and that it has an inordinate fondness for all sorts of legislation against monopolies. To answer such charges as these would bo. a waste of time, for they from a total misconception of the relations existing between the W 1 people and the corporations by which they have baen oppressed, and nothing short of actual experience can adequate lain what those relations ave. If railroad corporations we to attempt ) run the politics and muke the laws of New York or Massachusetts | for a single year as they have tried to do with varying degreos of success in Nebeaska, Kansas and the Dakotas for many years the anti-monopoly sentiment in those old states would ba rampant enongh. Human nature is much the same the dover. In the state of New York they ave trying to legislate the elevator business out of the hands of corporations and into the nds of the state. This is the way paternalism springs up in the Empire state when occasion, demands it. Given the same conditions and there will be found as much hostility to corpora- tions and monopolies in tho states washed by the Atlantic oceanas in those shed by the Missouri river. It is fool- ish for the to disparage the west under any civenmstances. The two sc tions of the country, if indeed they ba spoken of as in any are interd sl east may pendent in $5 many ways and | joined by 50 many ties of common inter- est that it never ought to be necessary for either to protest against unjust crit- icism ou the part of the othe TO BOOM THE SOUTH A convention quite unique in char- actel 1 as it will be of the goy- ernors of the southern states, will be held in Richmond this The principal object of the meeting is to place before the world facts regardir the condition of the south, by way of showing its advantages for immigrants and capitalists, The promoters of the conference are of the opinion that the fact of its being composed of governors of states instead of dc ates in the ordinary way will more surely command attention, and in this they are doubtless correct. S0 novel a plan of working up @ boom can havdly fail to receive more than ordinary considevation, and hence better results are to be expected from it than might be obtained from the usual | kind of convention. wes It will bo a noteworthy expression of a growing desire in the south to im- prove both thomatorial-and social con- ditions of that W'(jm._ Vory gratifying AS TO INMPEACHMENT, Vo Dodge Advertiser: Give them a fair, im- progress has begn,made during the past | paetial teinl, and if proven guilty lot them decndo in buiidingh up the industries in | sufferthe consequences of their wrong doings. Clay Contor Sun; | and a full d i aye, rather | Wo want a elopment of the facts, xpect 0 learn that th fair trial nd hopo, state of! portions of the §\Ah, capital has been, ptt A groat deal of sted to that sec- tion from the niwth, and has found, gen- | ficers have not been half as bad as pictured ; orally, profitabld Yivestment. But the | Dutif they have, let them suffer the penalty ally, | for thoir crimes, oxtent of this development has not been Holdroge Citizen: Now that the supreme so general as tho industrial statistics | court is to pass on the question as to whether scem to indicatd, | There is still a con- | Ui A‘M. ]'ul stat ‘-m‘lm’\ wu“n\(\ or ’..HL wablo par ore the | Peoble should suspend their judgment, fee siderable part of the south where the | {pecu . thay the wholo truth of the matter material conditidts are not very much | will be made public and that justice will be better than they, w a quarter of & ""I”" . R o m ol W (bl Gt ANess Pors Joomington Echo: The Ieho would liko ntury ago. and th Do f th ! to see a fair and impartial trial of the state | tions foel that there is little promise of | oficers who are under trial for impeachment much improvement in the future unless | No party partisanship should enter into tho immigration can he deawn to them. The | trisl and ifit is clearly proven that there is immigration can he drawn to them. I anything rotten in Denmark they should bo meeting of g nors will bo chiefly de- voted to showing the ady which these sections of the south off to im- migrants, and undoubtedly a glowing statement will be made of tho inviting conditions that prevail there. The time is peculiarly auspicious for retired from office. Schuyler Herald: It seems to be tho general opinion ¢ »od citizens that tho impeachment proceedings that have been in stituted against several of our state office shonld be most thoroughly gone into. Thers should bo no whitewashing allowed, as altogether too much of that has been done in years gone by. tages doing this, since the attention of Buro- rand Island Times: 1f the state officers sans will be directed toward this coun- | Wwho mixed up in these impeachmoent A vroceedings are guilty they should be pun tey with more than usual interest this | jiheq. They nave made their on beds and vear, and it is not unlikely that a | there1s no good roason why they should not more than ordinary diversion of ime | e in then, ) honest republican ean or 5 3 will be an_apologist for corruption in oMcial migration to th outh may be || I tho patty heeds purging lot the effected. But it is hardly proba- | purging bo given it and may the lesson be of ble that any very considerable | value to future servants of the people number of the immigrants from Europe | iR UGS e RS A will be induced to go there so long as the | threw out its dragnet and Tom Benton is west continnes to offer such favorable | caught inits meshes and he must have the | search light of in L sstization turned upon his opportunitics to them for home-making Si1 e viale amcil past record Iis well! The whole ofticial and it will bo generations before these | doings of the state house should be thrown are oxhausted. The pesple who come | Open to the public gaze, and whatever is 4 ‘I,”] 1 i I )A e s wrong corrected It our ofticers have been here from the novth of Euvope find 10 | ¢hort in theie duties suflicient to warrant special inducement in the genial climate | impeachment, then impeach. The lesson Y 801 116 EheFlios costern | Will be a wholesome one. 1f they are not in »r‘n uth, while the rigor of western | o €0 A ould be vindicated, The in winters has no tervors for them. Be- | vestigation will naturally inspire more eau- sides they naturally desire to go where | tion and more care in the transaction of their labor will compete with people of | Publicduties. their own eolor and to a considerable HARRISONL IS GENZALOGY, extent of their own race. While, theve- i Ll LR Serros, Neb., Apri o the Editor of s ulgi b R D Tue Bee: In g li“.vr to “W. H. R of ernors muy bo productive of some ben- | ik TR T ERCE O on, it any, cfits to that 10 Prove so geeat ¢ section, thesé o not likely i is Carter Harrison, Chicago's next mayor, to is hoped for. ex-President Benjamin Hurrison?* Tie B . = = replied, “They arve not related.” I'HE prompt settlement of the strike Tue Breis ine Carter Harrison is of employes on the World's fair build- | a descendent “of the family of Harrisons the ings, upon terms which insure perma- | known to be ox-president’s ancestors. | In 1884, the year Carter Harrison was the nent peace, will be gratifying to every: | gomocratic candidate for eovornor of Hlinois. body who desires the sucesss of that | I had occasion to look up his genealogy and | great entevprise, A prolonged conflict | in my research found that he descends from 2 3 noble ana distinguisted ancestors. would have been a very serious matter The name prominent in Virginia long in its effect upon the exposition, and | before and particularly during the colonial | 1fatt Joth the workinrmen and the eouncil of | period, and that his great grandfather, Car. both the workingmon and the council of | FoFr filinison, from whom Mayor Harri administration ave to be eordially com- | gon takes his nume, was an_own brother to mended for the od sense shown in | Benjamin Harvison, signer of n..-n.lmr ration s gy he lenat | Of Independence and father of President coming to an agreement with the least | Syqiyn Honry Harrison, Thus it 1s scen possible delay, and upon a basis that is | that Carter Harrison and ex-Prosident Har entirely equitable. It is of no | risonare reiated by a direct line of ances. s v . 2 & ANl tors. consequence now to discuss the merits | e rmily of Harrison from which Carter of the controversy. There may Harrison springs early intermarried with the Carters and Randoiphs and through the i have | | been some fau both sides, but how- i el U P U former Thomas Jefterson and John Randclph ever that may bo the adjustment is com- | \Cara near akin and through the latter the plete and satisfuetory There is one | Reeces of Virgima and Breekinridges of Ken: es80n 0 y incide at noeds to be | tueky. ‘The fact of this relationship led tho lesson of the iucident that noeds tobe | ¢\ of Curtor Harrison to locate i Ken- noted, and that 5 that when in diffi- | yeiy, and on February 25, 1825 the distin- culties of this kind men ¢omo together | guished mayor was bofu in that stato. - His i f ip | fatherdymg eight months afterwards, left v mest desire to reach a faiv ying e LI LR S SRS to reach a faie [ hinne G Feniid to. his widowed mother, settlement they very generally suceeed in | Sho was a woman of strong will and excel doing so. The work on the fair buildings ' leat judgment and assisted him in learning will doubtloss 16w go forward more ; his first lessons. ~ At the ago of 15 he w tuught by Lewis Marshall, broth of tn great ehief justice, and aftor two years en tered Yale, where he graduated 1’ 1845, In 1851 he went to Burope, traveling over every part of England, Treland and Scotland anid zoing over almost the entire continent, He passed into Exypt and thence with Bayard Taylor, the colebrated American travelerand rapidly than ever and the workingme will be 1 that all dung. of furthe remove ing for THE state is still anxiously look W patenen I RS S visited Syris and Asin Minor. Crounse on the maximum freight rate Land of tho Saracens’ was the be in order at this time to | result of this tour, and Harrison's name may bill. It may He made two other call atten wife dying ‘in be found on its nages. exended trips to Europe, his Germany in 1876, Mayor Hurrison is a lawyer of acknowl- ability. His honorable and illustrious n'to the const vision governing bills passed by the legislatu tutional pro- that have been and submitted ed nais of avticles designed to disparage | for approval tothe governor. Scetion | parentage, his varied nd extensive inter. i i ¥ h 5 sonstituticn provides: course with eminent men of this country and and discredit the great west. It is teue | 19 of the constituticn provides: purse with eminent men c ¢ t ey Sy A ks Any bill which shall ot be returnsd |y | his travels abroad perhaps make hiin the 1t this seotlon 1s yob oompavabively | oo 'ocamor within five days (Sundnys ox- | MO8t suitable person for mayor of Chicago, new and uandeveloped, but it is by no ». : 3 b in which eapacity he will be called upon to s WAt b s | cepted) after it shall have been presented to | pgeoive visiors from overy country to the means true that it lacks the brains, the | i shall become u law, in like manner as | World's Columbian fair. ~ A. W. NELSON if he had signed it. unless the legislature, by T T ey thewr adjournment, prevent its return: in which case it shall be , with his objec- tions, in the oftice of the secrotary of state within five days after such adjournment, or become a law. House roll 33, the railroad rate bill, was placed in the hands of the governor Saturday, but the adjournment of the legislature on the same day extended the time within which the bill must oither be vetoed, approved or become o law without the governor's signature up till Friday next. THE BE New Yous, April 3.—To the Editor of Tng Ber: It must beapparent to all good citi- zens that the time has come, on the part of the people, to make an earnest, intelligent and determined effort to redress the evils inflicted, not alone upon this great commer- cial community, but the business interests of the whole country, by a comparatively insignificant number of selfish and greedy capitalists, organized for plunder, known as the Bell Telephone company. This mos vicious of corporate monopolies, hecdless alike of the interests of @ or the comm The Graae 0000 good of the people, insists upou levying and et continuing to levy a most outrageous tribute the World’a fair will be formally opened in Value, ‘illegal ‘and. unjust in its Jackson park May 1 nd out of reasonable proportious T e to the services rendeced its patrons. Mustorly functivity, Various guilds and associations of this city Washingten Star, have spent a great of time and money The demand for Adlai's ms to have | in o vain effort to relicve the people from the | been subordinated to a eclamor for My, | oppression of this corrupt monopoly, but ex- Olney's trust-smashing sledge hammer, perience has proved that commercial organi - zations, like ILr.nIA- \mh; s. which are non- " political in character, ve no iafluence Holoing U ur Kad: Shatover ou the avorage lawmaker at a0y SIS, H Albany or Washington, who, for special o0 far as we are able.to judge of the | Lo so1s, is disposed to be more than friendly progress of the Bering Sea arbitration the | yrt¥ 8GOS AL on Wo. be United States is holding up its end of the | /¥ PV He proper remedy lies in the ro- rgument in a f spangled manner. irly creditable and star- | yiroment from public life of the corrupt tools of the Bell Telephone monopoly, now misrep- resenting their constituents in our courts and logislatures, and putting in their places honest, fearless and incorruptible repre- sentatives of the people. The Anti-Monopoly - - The Right Man in the Right Place, Philadelphia. Ledger. Lochren, the new pension commis. Judge I sioner, comes into office well recommended, | Joague is peculiarly fitted to undertake this not only by politicians of both partics, but | \Work, as it was especially formed for such vy the people, and the people generally | purposes. Called iuto existenco thirteen know a good man when they see him years ago by the ageression of corporate - - monopoly upon public rights, it succeeded Getting Rid of'a Troublesome Author, in placing upon the statute books Kangae City Jowrnal. of the stato such beneficial laws The Liverpool cofi¥ulute has been given to | us that _establishing a railroad com aman who draftéd’ the tariff plank in the | mission, a Bureau of Labor Statistics, or Chizago platform,asd may salve his feclin anized a board of arbitration and other laws for the shameful way in which that plunk | and weasures in the interest of the people. has been disregarded since the election. 1t did this through the medium of thoroughly - arranged political action, backed up by pub Comparative Spe ed of War Ships. lie sentiment engendered by the principles it New York Tribune advocated. To reward faithful public ser When comparisons are made between the | vants, to punish the coreupt ones. is the speed of Americai and Furopean war ships | motto of the lvagus, and ou this we propose characteristic diffictences in the trials ought | to make this issue | not to be overlooked. The measured mile is | The League has a branch organization in oevery senatorial district in this county it proposes Lo use all its power to rep issued patents of the Bell'l comp: to defeat for renomination spointment or re-election the men who have so basely betrayed the interests of the people. the ordinavy test. cmployed abroad, and an artificial record is made, ‘The vessel enters the mile with fires at their best and all th conditions favorahle for a spurt. Speed ob. tained under such vircumstances cannot be maintained continpgusly for a long period The Aucrican reconl is an average secured during a tew hours vun. It is not an arti- With this purpose in view, we ask the aid ficial burst of speed, but a genuine indication | and coopgration of all good citizevs, and also of the ship's actual performauco at sca request and desire all commercial bodies, nd al the epho —————————————————————— Highest of all in Leavening Power.— Latest U, S. Gov't Report. Baki ROZQ@@! Powc?e% ABSOLUTELY PURE WEDNESOAY, APRIL 12, 1893<SIXTEEN PAGES. | trade and labor organizations and all other assoclations that believe in our principles wo LEGISLATIVE ECRO, join hanas with us in this movement. Clay Centor Garette: 1f tho legislaturo K. . Awnerr, Chalrman suc s In turning the rasceals out of the Grxenar B, M. Lee, Sccrotary. stato house it will be entitlod to tho well & | known planait, “Well .« wood and faith Sinsr e “ e ful servant ot b L Lincolu Horald: The maximum rato bill _ York Tomes o | has finally passod and is now ready for the o previous terms had propared Mr. | governor's signat 1t will bo signe and + think of going out of [ it thoy might just as v for leadership, and he at_once took & very prominent position in tho house His sturdy, honesty, strong individuality and good native common sense commended him if any of the railroac business on account well begiu to tear up. n < Thurston County Republican: The articles to the honest and thinking members, and he sAchmmont Ag exerted as great an influence as any member. | §5 MPGIhment againsy Allea, Humiph No one doubts Mr, Kockley's honesty or the | (i Sho Hastings have been adopted purity of his_motives, and_those who know | (ho, Cee 18 now ready for the cour him do not believe for a moment that ho was | Wi\l'he, "o g gy sifted and no under the dictation of any one. He {s always [ W15 1C clict no guilty man escape,™ but let | his own man. He thinks and acts for him. | "0, M10cent man bo punished self and entirely indopendent of overy one Tilden Citizen: Tie Bre sh-uld be happy If he makes mistakes he never blames uny | O¥Cr What has occurred at Lincoln during one but himself and never. tries to shift yhe | the past week. verything that journal ad responsibility of his actions onto other | Yocated went through and if it is true that shoulders, He is firmly convincod that his | Rosewator has no influence, ns some claim course in the legislature was r the best it must be admitted that he is a mighty interests of the state and of the republican | ACCUTAte prognosticator of rosults party, and he asks no one to share the Grand Island Independent: The railroad responsibility of Other men would have | men claim that the freight rate bitl is uncon. done differently, perhaps, but no man could | stitutional and that it was only originited act from purer motvies or more independ- | to cnltivate a good cropof votes. They will ently of any outside influence than did Mr. | begin actions in the courts at once, should Keckloy the governor sixn it, to determine its consti - tutionality. And at the same time one af New Blood i Folitios. these mon claims that if the courts should York Times, .»mm"- the *railroad companies will make What the republican party of Nebraska [ MOFe by advancing their rates farm needs and must hnwhh! w blood in politicy | Products than they will lose by read and new and different men_ for candidates, | Eodtetions upon dry woods, et ral 1€ this policy, had been followed it would | FOAdS ave trying to save tho farmers! luter havo been ih much botter condition today, | @Stng history, very It is a wrong idea to pick up old hacks for [ Jearney Telegram: In the early history office who have been_twenty-five or thirty | Of this nation the name of Benton was tho vears in pursuit of office, and who always | SYnonym of integrity and ability. When on have been candidates for some elective of them w ted to ol + public had appointive position. Men who have ca no fears ¢ nest acts or poculation. But loused their knees and their conscience [ it has boen left to Nebraska to develop one cringing, crawling and begeing for by that name who has smirched the name ot pointment will ways | disgrace thoe Bentons. Bt thanks w tho kindness of solves and their party. Office to | Providence in creating lineage, Nebrasku's thom s only a source of rovenue, | Jon Benton buars no relationship o the and when they have appointments to | Tom Benton that spent the last thirty years make they appoint men who can make the | Of his life in thesenato. The latter fills an most out of it for themselves and their chiof, | honored gravo—the former 1s in o fair way As long as such men_are elected corr 10 be sent out i disgrace on account of dis. will disgrace the party and honest men will [ honorable acts while filling & high oficial blush to vote the ticket. The principles of | station republicanis dear to us, and the loyalty | Plattsmouth Journal: The Lincoln Journal and wisdom of the party and its great o y avgument it could iuvent to pre leaders are a source of pride and satisfac it the impeichment of its friends, the ras tion. For those principles and for the party [ cally stato oficers, and now that, despite its which stands by them we are ready to do | protest, they have been impesched, 1t sots everything in our power. The only reward | up a whine about the proceeding being an we ask is a clean and patriotic administra- | injury to the state, by making o bad impres tion. I'rom this time forth the Times will | sion in the east —in view of which it is very advoeate the nomination of a different class | sorry, indeed. That paper should be pitied of men. The old log rollerd and corraption- | 1t had no thought of protecting the state ists have brought the party into disrepute | treasury while the robbers were plundering and to the verge of ruin. There are | it rightand loft, but was blinding the eyes thousanas of upright, intelligent and [ of the people by its humbug shibboleth, | patriotic republicans in Nebraska who stand up for Nebraska.” Its present in. have never bowed the knee to Baal, | terestin the reputation of the state is tho whose hands are clean and whose hearts | growlof the wolf dviven from its prey. It are pure. They are the men to lead the re- [ had botter take a sneak. The punishment publican party to victory, and to restore it to | of corrupt offivials will be suro to improve its original place in the hearts and coufl- | the good name of the state in all the land dence of the people. A man who has spent - his whote life in the pursuit of public ofice LAUGHING G, and_plunder, and who has grown old and - crafty in dissimulation and scheming, loses | | Wash VStar: “Now," said the Board of all sense of trath and honor, all generosity | Trade member ‘u\m ‘mm“r‘ matity, “we will and manhood, and becomes a cheap, brocoed ¢ DATAQIUUL UL LasMIS mon lint, and n Bollish and gracdy Life: First Falr One So Fred and Arthur mun. The vepnblican party of Nebraska | hoth proposed to her. Which was the lucky must shake off the barnacles. They load it down and exhaust its vitality. We want The Other Fair One 1 don’t know yot. Fred more such men as Auditor Eugene Moore | married her scems to be; men of honest purpose, patriotic o nat T P L (0 sentiment and regard for their good nam AR e L IR e e beautiful t Vietae," i sho is hor men who have a future of promise instend | gwnreward. she does all the housework and of a record of broken promises. Letus be BULs DO Wages, gin atonce to start a move for new, clean and honest men. Then the republican party | Siftings: Young Husband Didw't T telo- will rise from its low estate and resume its | graph you not (o bring your mother with you? position in the confidence of the beople. Touneitesthnes jront sl wiiWStosio you about. She read the dispateh Sl NEBRASKA AND NEBRASKANS, Topies: Tow many things there are to laugh s atin this world to the girl who has pretty The creamery at Albion is nearing com- | tevth tidLuiples pletion Pittsburg Chironicle: “Great Seott!” ojacu- There are $20.000 worth of buildings being | lat tiear (his = Taalian at”ony . oted Vorth Bet sittl Sixty raw oggs, and then burst ¢ oL yen BROH crying like an infant Made hin chickens D. G. Eldringe, a prominent business man ¥ a1 adee,” answered Gloomer of Fremont is dead, aged 61 years , I'he cautlous man nover Wolf, a popular citizen of Howard, | Buffalo Couricr: : 3 e any chanees. ‘That's tho reasol O S tou of quick " consumotion aftera short | WA, GG G (st Yo here arve forty safety bicyeles owned in Somerville Journal: Employe Are you o habit, young man? No, siri [never smoke addicted to the tob Would-be Employe anything but clgarcttes, allerton and a wheel elub will probably be anized The Fullerton creamery is now in ful operation and the stockholders are expecting Clothicr and Furnisher s h y—I never at results. werr so. Lhave worn thew con= i:e Grand Island Canning company has N, ikve notidod aEY contracted for an acreage of 2,200 werds, 500 e raye Balla 1 peas and 1,700 in sweet corn ‘_ Cash Ellington, the Neligh youth who | Litei Small Chance Willis: That youns L 2 d > was | man i cornet is siek. Wallaco jrlatiaeld g, “lf' ,‘5' ""_‘,“'" ‘I‘\* Do you think he will recovery “I'm afrald dragged a considerable distance on the |0 gy doctor who is attending him lives point of & plow, will recover. although his | uext door.” injuries were at first considered fatal, ek A young couple at Fullerton misrepre _ LOVE'S REPLY. sented matters to the county judge and suc- ; Kansas City Jowrnal. ceeded in securing a marriage license, but “Will youlovo me whon 1'm old?" while the m er was n the act of pro Asked the husband of his bride; 3 ¢ s | sty on the fires of life cold, nouncing them man and wife the girl's I CL R e father put in_an appearance and stopped AR A proceedings. The license has been revoked Wiklyou qonstans o and true? and the young people have returned home single to await a more favorable opportu nity. (He was rich and fifty-ive, She was ad twenty-two), Then she smiled and mado reply. And her voice was clear and strong: “1 will love you till you die % If you don’t hung'on too long." S IT HAPPENS EVERY YEAR, Clothicr and Furnisher. Mrs, Younghusbandz Wiy con'tyou Sty alr, 5 t home this evenin rue? [ Oh, glorious spring! Oh, haimy air, 1Y AL HDMB 1R eVl oreet i Full soon we'll take with zest | Our last year's summer underwear Forth from the cedar chest ) tind it out, # YOX POrULL Washingtin Star I'm a very lonely creature, ve nothing much to do, work s Of natur 't need attending 1o, PrODCT Ca » tiuke my pen and lnk Aud 1o seribbie for the paper Every thoughtlet that I think We'll place it on our backs. And then from morn till i We'll frisk aboat in transient glee, Beeause we feel so 1ght Whoope But when the doctor comes next day, And we are stecped n wor wives will shake theirhéads and say, now, 1 told you 5o BROWNING, KING & co. Lurgost Munufasturors an | i0ynllass of Clothiug la thy World Got 'Em in ¢. Box The tailor no longer stands any show when it P comes to turning out nobby We make up so many suits that fit as well, look as well, and are as wearing apparel. well as private tailored gar- ments, that we afford to sell them at half tailor prices. We have never before gath- ered around us so fine a line of spring suits for boys and men as this year—Our children’s department on the second floor is the largest and most complete in this western country—Boys' suits from $2 up— Men’s suits fron $8.50 up. The hats are tempora- rily on the third floor, and we are selling lots of them at lower prices than hat stores do—Meantime they are working at that hole in the wall. BROWNING, KING & CO., §. W. Cor. 16th and Doujlas 3t can Btore op 1 ovory evenlaztll 6.3% | urduy tili 1o |

Other pages from this issue: